The Daily Courier

Late-season storm shuts down Northeast

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NEW YORK — A blustery late-season storm clobbered the Northeast with sleet and heavy snow on Tuesday, crippling much of the Washington-to-Boston corridor after a stretch of unusually mild winter weather that had people thinking spring was already here.

The powerful nor’easter unloaded 30-60 centimetre­s of snow in places, grounded more than 6,000 flights, knocked out power to nearly a quarter-million customers from Virginia northward and, by the time it reached Massachuse­tts, had turned into a blizzard, with winds gusting at nearly hurricane force over 110 km/h along the coast and waves crashing over the seawalls.

It was easily the biggest storm in a merciful winter that had mostly spared the Northeast, and many weren’t happy about it.

“It”s horrible," said retired gumballmac­hine technician Don Zimmerman, of Lemoyne, Penn., using a snowblower to clear the sidewalk along his block. “I thought winter was out of here ... It’s a real kick in the rear.”

While people mostly heeded dire warnings to stay home and off the roads, police said a 16-year-old girl was killed when she lost control of her car on a snowy road and hit a tree in Gilford, New Hampshire.

The storm closed schools in cities big and small, Amtrak suspended service and the post office halted mail delivery.

Philadelph­ia and New York City escaped the brunt of the snow, getting just a few inches and not the foot or more forecaster­s had expected before the storm switched over mostly to sleet. New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie called the storm an “underperfo­rmer.” But officials warned of dangerous ice.

Inland areas, meanwhile, got hit hard. Binghamton, New York, had 55 cm by midafterno­on.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? Cherie Burke contends with blowing snow during Tuesday in Portland, Maine.
The Associated Press Cherie Burke contends with blowing snow during Tuesday in Portland, Maine.

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